So, I've got this phrase: ''Far from fleeing monotony, animals crave it, and what they most dread is to see it end.''
Can someone explain me why it is written ''to see it end'' rather than ''to see ...

How to have two "to + verbs"? Is it to verb 1 + verb 2 or to verb 1 + to verb 2?
Lead a team to integrate two systems and increase the accuracy of report.
Lead a team to integrate two systems and to ...

A fellow teacher said to me that the to~ infinitive always implies the future..."to eat", "to swim" etc. I disagreed and said that I thought it was abstract and had no tense in of itself.
He pointed ...

I understand that a comma is used before "and" when the conjunction precedes an independent clause; however, I'm curious if the same rule applies when it precedes an infinitive phrase:
"It was my job ...

"To play basketball" is an infinitive phrase. An infinitive phrase is generally used as a noun. Is the word "professionally" as in "To play basketball professionally..." an adjective or an adverb?
Is ...

How is it to work as a teacher? vs How is to work as a teacher?
I think the first sentence has one superfluous word, 'it'. I sure know 'it' refers to 'to work as a teacher?' Why do you use the first ...

I came across a sentence recently: Before I turn 40, I want to have written a book.
Could someone explain to me what does it actually mean?
I'd rather say: Before I turn 40, I want to write a book. ...

"We have to be hard on you, you have to be cured," is grammatically correct?
Shouldn't it be "We have to be hard on you; you have to be cured," as these are two independent clauses. I've seen it in ...

I am working on the lyrics for one of my songs and english is not my first language.
Here's the question - which of these sentences is correct?
No thorns to prick your heart
No thorns to prick your ...

I'm a little bit confused with understanding news titles. I recently started to read news in English willing to improve my language skills, but there is one thing that I totally can't understand (and ...

I came up with this question when I received an email from a committee with a sentence 'We have decided not to publish it', which seems really strange to me because the grammar I learned in English ...